Cocaine Street Names

Cocaine is a drug that goes by a variety of street names and nicknames. Below is a list of a few of the many street names and slang terms used across the country to refer to cocaine. The street slang used for cocaine are so numerous that it's almost impossible to list them all here. Some of the most popular include:

Cocaine; combination of crack and marijuana; crack and tobacco combined in a joint; coca paste and marijuana

Bazulco

Cocaine

Beam

Cocaine

Beam me up Scottie

Cocaine (powder or crack) combined with PCP

Behind the scale

To weigh and sell cocaine

Beiging

Chemicals altering cocaine to make it appear a higher purity; chemically altering cocaine to make it look brown

Belushi

Combination of cocaine and heroin

Bernice

Cocaine

Bernie

Cocaine

Bernie's flakes

Cocaine

Bernie's gold dust

Cocaine

Big bloke

Cocaine

Big C

Cocaine

Big flake

Cocaine

Big rush

Cocaine

Billie hoke

Cocaine

Bipping

Snorting heroin and cocaine, either separately or together

Birdie powder

Cocaine; heroin

Black rock

Crack Cocaine

Blanca (Spanish)

Cocaine

Blanco (Spanish)

Heroin plus cocaine

Blast

Cocaine; Smoke crack; Marijuana; smoke marijuana or crack

Blizzard

A white cloud in a pipe used to smoke cocaine

Blotter

Crack cocaine; LSD

Blow

Cocaine; to inhale cocaine; to smoke marijuana; to inject heroin

Blow blue

To inhale cocaine

Blow coke

To inhale cocaine

Blow smoke

To inhale cocaine

Blunt

Marijuana inside a cigar; cocaine and marijuana inside a cigar

Body-packer

Individual who ingests wrapped packets of crack or cocaine to transport

Bolivian marching powder

Cocaine

Booster

To inhale cocaine

Bopper

Crack cocaine

Bouncing powder

Cocaine

Boy

Cocaine; heroin

Boy-girl

Heroin mixed with cocaine

Break night

Staying up all night on a cocaine binge until daybreak

Brick

Crack Cocaine; cocaine; marijuana; 1 kilogram of marijuana

Bubble gum

Cocaine; crack cocaine; marijuana from Tennessee

Bump

Crack; fake crack; cocaine; boost a high; hit of ketamine ($20)

Bump up

Use of cocaine to bolster MDMA (methylenedioxymethamphetamine)

Bumper

Crack cocaine

Bumping up

Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) combined with powder cocaine

Bunk

Fake cocaine; Crack Cocaine

Burese

Cocaine

Burnese

Cocaine

Bush

Marijuana; cocaine; PCP

C

Cocaine

C & M

Cocaine and morphine

C joint

Place where cocaine is sold

C-dust

Cocaine

C-game

Cocaine

Cabello (Spanish)

Cocaine

Cadillac

Cocaine; PCP

Caine

Cocaine; Crack Cocaine

California cornflakes

Cocaine

Came

Cocaine

Candy

Cocaine; Crack Cocaine; amphetamine; depressants

Candy C

Cocaine

Candy flipping on a string

Combining or sequencing LSD with MDMA; mixing LSD, MDMA, and cocaine

Candy sticks

Marijuana cigarettes laced with powdered cocaine

Candy sugar

Powder cocaine

Caps

Heroin; psilocybin/psilocin; crack; Gamma Hydroxybutyrate (GHB)

Carnie

Cocaine

Carrie

Cocaine

Carrie Nation

Cocaine

Caviar

Combination of cocaine and marijuana; Crack Cocaine

CDs

Crack cocaine

Cecil

Cocaine

Chalked up

Under the influence of cocaine

Chalking

Chemically altering the color of cocaine so it looks white

Champagne

Combination of cocaine and marijuana

Charlie

Cocaine

Chase

To smoke cocaine; to smoke marijuana

Chicken scratch

Searching on hands and knees for crack or cocaine

Chippy

Cocaine

Choe

Cocaine

Cholly

Cocaine

Cigamos

Combination of crack cocaine and tobacco

Coca

Cocaine

Cocaine blues

Depression after extended cocaine use

Cocktail

Combination of crack and marijuana; cigarette laced with cocaine or crack; partially smoked marijuana cigarette inserted in regular cigarette; to smoke cocaine in a cigarette

Cocoa puff

To smoke cocaine and marijuana

Coconut

Cocaine

Coke

Cocaine; Crack Cocaine

Coke bar

A bar where cocaine is openly used

Cola

Cocaine

Combol

Cocaine

Comeback

Benzocaine and mannitol used to adulterate cocaine for conversion to crack

Connie

Powder cocaine

Cooking up

To process powdered cocaine into crack.

Coolie

Cigarette laced with cocaine

Cork the air

To inhale cocaine

Corrine

Cocaine

Corrinne

Cocaine

Cotton brothers

Cocaine, heroin and morphine

Crack

Cocaine

Crack bash

Combination of crack cocaine and marijuana

Crisscrossing

The practice of setting up a line of cocaine next to a line of heroin. The user places a straw in each nostril and snorts about half of each line. Then the straws are crossed and the remaining lines are snorted

Cigarette made from cocaine paste and tobacco; drug dependency; heroin

Monos (Spanish)

Cigarette made from cocaine paste and tobacco

Monster

Cocaine

Mosquitos

Cocaine

Movie star drug

Cocaine

Mujer (Spanish)

Cocaine

Murder One

Heroin and cocaine

Nieve (Spanish)

Cocaine

Nose

Cocaine; heroin

Nose candy

Cocaine

Nose powder

Cocaine

Nose stuff

Cocaine

Number 3

Cocaine; heroin

One and one

To inhale cocaine

One bomb

100 rocks of crack cocaine

One on one house

Where cocaine and heroin can be purchased

One plus one sales

Selling cocaine and heroin together

Onion

1 oz. of crack cocaine

Oyster stew

Cocaine

P-dogs

First Name:

Last Name:

Age:

Gender:

State:

City:

Phone:

Email:

Describe the situation:

Cocaine Facts

The 1993 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse reported that 11.3% of those surveyed (aged 12 and older) had used cocaine. Of these, .2% used cocaine once a week or more. 2.2% used in the past year and .6% used in the past month.

The beginning of the cocaine withdrawal process is the hardest since the user's body automatically wants more of the drug. This desire is known as a "craving" and is possibly the hardest part of cocaine withdrawal a person has to experience. During the craving period the body tells the mind that it needs more cocaine. When this physiological connection is opened, the obsession to use becomes very powerful.

The chemical component that produces the "high" when using cocaine is found in the leaves of the South American coca tree. As with other opiates, its appearance in the Western world (in the mid-1800's) was originally greeted warmly. It was marketed as a "pick-me-up" in tonics and other patent medicines, and was an ingredient in the original formulation of Coca-Cola (removed in 1904).

The combination of cocaine and heroin is particularly dangerous and has been implicated in many deaths including famous individuals such as John Belushi and River Pheonix. Injecting cocaine is often more potent than smoking it because the entire amount directly enters the body as opposed to some escaping in vapors during the smoking process or not being released to its optimum during the heating of the crystal.

The duration of cocaine's immediate euphoric effects, which include hyper-stimulation, reduced fatigue, and mental clarity, depends on the route of administration. The faster the absorption, the more intense the high. On the other hand, the faster the absorption, the shorter the duration of action. The high from snorting cocaine typically lasts 15 to 30 minutes, while the high from smoking cocaine may last 5 to 10 minutes. An overdose of cocaine may produce tremors, convulsions, and delirium. Death may occur due to arrhythmias and cardiovascular failure.

The effects of cocaine generally occur in about 15-20 minutes and disappear in about I hour. The immediate effects are what make cocaine so addicting. The user is willing to endure the lows in order to experience the highs.

The goal of all cocaine abuse treatment programs is to educate the drug user to the facts about chemical dependency and the changes needed to live a drug free lifestyle. A variety of therapy can be included in a given drug rehab setting depending on the clinical intensity of the center. Most centers provide counseling, behavioral therapy, lectures, group therapy, discussion groups and other types of services to persons with drug use disorders. Many various behavioral drug rehab programs have been shown to help drug rehab patients achieve and maintain prolonged abstinence.